
In an attempt to show just how slow South Africa's Telkom broadband is, a frustrated IT company had a race to see which would be faster: transferring 4GB by sending a USB drive via pigeon 60 miles away, or transferring the files via the broadband connection. There were even rules in place so as to not have any unfair advantage over the broadband such as "birdseed must not have any performance-enhancing seeds within."
It was faster to send the data by pigeon than by broadband. It took the bird about an hour to reach the recipient station, and it took another hour to transfer the data to the other computer. The file being transferred via the broadband connection was still at 4%. Telkom said that it is not responsible for the firm's slow Internet speed. Winston, the bird, is safely back in the IT office, probably enjoying birdseed without any performance-enhancing caplets mixed in.
Member since:
2008-06-25
Exactly!
This is the first thing they teach on our data communication classes at University of Helsinki. You can get insane bandwidth by moving disks on a truck.
Then the story continues on the peer-to-peer course by explaining that moving disks by walking is a peer-to-peer network with rather good bandwidth.
Online peer-to-peer file-sharing systems are then built to solve the problem of figuring out who has what. They also make moving content around cheaper, as you don't have to be walking around moving disks.